Skip to Content
A Post-War Model for Verifying Iran’s Missile Arsenal
  • Report
  • A Post-War Model for Verifying Iran’s Missile Arsenal

    This study proposes a model for constraining and verifying Iran’s ballistic missile arsenal by employing a layered Strategic Verification Model with seven components: comprehensive baseline declarations; missile test and launch monitoring; intrusive inspections; quantitative and qualitative limits on missile capabilities; production controls, especially on solid-fuel manufacturing; a robust enforcement and compliance architecture; and regional confidence building measures.

    A New US-Iraq Relationship?
  • Analysis
  • A New US-Iraq Relationship?

    The US administration appears to have great expectations for Iraq’s new prime minister, Ali Falah al-Zaidi. But the expectations need to be tempered.

    June 25, 2026

    The Gulf Cannot Afford to Retreat from Lebanon
  • Analysis
  • The Gulf Cannot Afford to Retreat from Lebanon

    The 2026 Iran war has made Lebanon a core Gulf security concern, and Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar now have a narrow opportunity to curb Hizballah’s influence by leading reconstruction, strengthening Lebanese state institutions, and tying economic re-engagement to reform.

    June 25, 2026

    Featured Experts

    Filter by
    4448 Results
    A Discussion with Ken Pollack, Author of Unthinkable
  • Video
  • A Discussion with Ken Pollack, Author of Unthinkable

    On Wednesday, October 16, 2013, the Middle East Institute hosted author and Brookings senior fellow Ken Pollack for a discussion of his book, Unthinkable: Iran, the Bomb, and American Strategy(Simon & Schuster, 2013). In his latest work, Pollack explores the protracted tensions underlying the U.S.-Iranian relationship, how it evolved to its current status, and how the U.S. should best address Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

    October 16, 2013

    A Discussion with Ken Pollack, Author of Unthinkable
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • A Discussion with Ken Pollack, Author of Unthinkable

    The Middle East Institute is proud to host author and Brookings senior fellow Ken Pollack for a discussion of his book, Unthinkable: Iran, the Bomb, and American Strategy (Simon & Schuster, 2013). In his latest work, Pollack explores the protracted tensions underlying the U.S.-Iranian relationship, how it evolved to its current status, and how the U.S. should best address Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

    October 16, 2013

    A Discussion with Ken Pollack, Author of Unthinkable
    Middle East Institute

    A Discussion with Ken Pollack, Author of Unthinkable

    October 16 – January 1, 1970, October 16 - 12:00 PM – 12:00 AM
    January 1 - 12:00 PM – 12:00 AM

    The Middle East Institute, 1761 N St NW, Washington, District of Columbia 20036

    America and Iran: Always Winter, Never Christmas
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • America and Iran: Always Winter, Never Christmas

    In C.S. Lewis’ fantasy land of Narnia, the white witch put a spell on her realm to ensure that there would be perpetual winter and that Christmas would never come. For 34 years American-Iranian relations have been similar: a long, hard freeze unbroken by any cracks or signs of thaw.

    October 7, 2013

    Yemen Achieves Steady Progress against the Odds
  • Analysis
  • Yemen Achieves Steady Progress against the Odds

    The members of the Friends of Yemen, comprising over 30 governments and several international institutions, including the United Nations, World Bank, Arab League, and European Union, gathered for their sixth meeting September 25 in New York on the margins of the UN General Assembly. Chaired by the governments of Yemen, Saudi Arabia, and the United Kingdom, participants praised Yemen’s efforts to implement a political transition through inclusive and comprehensive dialogue and negotiation—a stark contrast to the course of events in better-known Syria and Egypt.

    September 27, 2013

    A Conversation on Yemen
  • Analysis
  • A Conversation on Yemen

    Last week, MEI scholars Allen Keiswetter, a retired Foreign Service officer, David Newton, former ambassador to Yemen, and Roby Barrett, author of Yemen: A Different Political Paradigm in Context (2011), gathered for an informal discussion about Yemen’s National Dialogue Conference (NDC), which began in March.

    September 27, 2013

    Saudi Arabia and the Syrian Brotherhood
  • Analysis
  • Saudi Arabia and the Syrian Brotherhood

    The openly difficult relationship between Saudi Arabia and Muslim Brotherhood chapters across the region has become a salient feature of Middle East politics since the advent of the “Arab Spring.” This mutual mistrust has increased in the wake of the Kingdom’s recent support for the military takeover in Cairo and the generals’ subsequent repression of the Brotherhood there. But how is the Islamist organization affected by this dynamic in Syria, where the Muslim Brothers and the Saudis both battle against Bashar al-Assad?

    September 27, 2013

    Dubai — The Middle East-Asia Hub
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Dubai — The Middle East-Asia Hub

    Over the past two decades, Dubai has risen to become a global financial, commercial shipping, aviation, and art hub. These essays examine Dubai’s key role in revitalizing the historic ties between the countries of the Middle East and Asia-Pacific regions.

    September 17, 2013

    The Saudis Aren't Going Anywhere
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Saudis Aren't Going Anywhere

    This article first appeared on Lobe Log.

    Whenever a Saudi Arabian king or senior prince publicly criticizes U.S. policy, they inevitably touch off speculation about how the Saudis may be rethinking their security alliance with the United States.

    September 16, 2013

    After the Financial Crisis: Dubai-China Economic Relations
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • After the Financial Crisis: Dubai-China Economic Relations

    Dubai is strategically located at a junction between Europe, Africa, and the Far East. For China, an emerging global leader in trade and international business, Dubai is a promising place in which to conduct business. Exploring Dubai-Sino economic relations beckons a more comprehensive understanding of both the level of Dubai’s economic diversification and the impact of the global financial crisis. Dubai’s private sector is extensively engaged in foreign trade, with an emphasis on the service industry. The service industry has three subsectors—tourism, finance, and real estate. Assessing the trajectory of China’s involvement in these three sectors of Dubai’s economy sheds light on how Dubai-Sino economic relations have been affected by the global financial crisis.

    September 15, 2013

    Gulf Governments Offer Financing for U.S. Strike on Syria
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Gulf Governments Offer Financing for U.S. Strike on Syria

    Like pieces fitting together in a jigsaw puzzle, Arab governments – presumably from the oil-rich Gulf Cooperation Council – offered to finance a U.S. military strike on Syria, according to comments made by Secretary of State John Kerry during testimony September 4 with the House Foreign Affairs Committee. In an exchange with Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL) on the potential cost of U.S. military action in Syria, Kerry said,

    September 11, 2013

    Dubai: Trade, Transit, and Cultural Amalgamation
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Dubai: Trade, Transit, and Cultural Amalgamation

    “Open Doors; Open Minds”—the tagline of the Sheikh Mohammed Center for Cultural Understanding (SMCCU), a non-profit organization advocating awareness and understanding among the various cultures that live in Dubai—epitomizes Dubai’s emergence as an international trade and transit hub as well as a place of cultural symbiosis that hosts diverse nationalities from almost all corners of the globe.

    September 6, 2013

    Support for el-Sisi: What’s in it for al-Saud?
  • Analysis
  • Support for el-Sisi: What’s in it for al-Saud?

    When King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia and his foreign minister, Prince Saud al-Faisal, issued unequivocal pledges of support for Egypt’s military government and its crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood, their move was widely depicted in the news media as a logical extension of the kingdom’s opposition to revolutionary movements in the Arab world. This simplistic view overlooks the fact that Saudi Arabia has responded differently to different uprisings—it supports the rebels in Syria, helped to crush them in Bahrain—and that aligning itself with Egypt’s new rulers could be a risky strategy.

    September 3, 2013

    Read the Middle East Journal

    The oldest peer-reviewed publication dedicated to the study of the modern Middle East, MEI’s flagship journal covers politics, society, and culture in the region.